Kitchell plays role in Phoenix Children’s Hospital transformation

Building delivered four months early and $48M under budget

PHOENIX (June 1, 2011) —Today marks the end of a long yet rewarding journey for Kitchell, builder of the $538 million patient tower at Phoenix Children’s Hospital (PCH), and heralds the beginning of a new era of pediatric excellence for the Valley and the country. This is Kitchell’s largest project in the firm’s 60-plus year history.

Kitchell broke ground on the 11-story facility in May 2008. With hundreds of new beds and new clinics, PCH will now treat children who need outpatient care in a variety of specialties, including dermatology, endocrinology, pulmonology, gastroenterology and orthopedics. Modeled on a night-blooming desert flower and visible from all over the Valley, the building is visually striking but it is the inner workings of the hospital that are most  remarkable, all designed and built with the highest quality patient care, comfort of patients and families and proximity of specialties in mind.

“Working on Phoenix Children’s Hospital has not only been a career highlight for all of us on the team, but it has been personally fulfilling, as well,” says Kitchell Senior Vice President Dan Pierce. “PCH has touched each of us at some point, whether directly with our own families or with our friends’ families. Being a part of this monumental hospital transformation, right down the road from Kitchell headquarters, was gratifying, exciting and even humbling. At different times during construction, we had more than a thousand workers, including subcontractors, on the job site. It was simply amazing.”

“Kitchell has done a great job. The company exemplifies collaboration, integrity and excellence, says David Cottle, executive director of planning, design and construction for the hospital. “I have been particularly impressed with the attention to the tiniest details to ensure the best possible quality. This has been a large project wedged into a residential neighborhood. Kitchell made it a top priority to plan and phase the work so that construction congestion had only a limited impact on the surrounding community.”

In addition to more than 1,000 workers on the site at one time, here are other fun facts about the PCH tower construction:

  • Number of days from ground breaking to grand opening: 1,107 calendar days
  • Construction man-hours worked:  3,206,803 through mid-May 2011
  • Wire (power): 7,500,000 feet
  • Concrete: 35,496 cubic yards
  • Rebar – 3,267,379 pounds
  • Dirt removed for the Tower basement: 75,000 cubic yards
  • Structural steel: 6,500 tons
  • Lobby/elevator mosaic:  450,000 1”x1” tiles

Kitchell executive elected vice president of healthcare engineering association

The Central Arizona Society for Healthcare Engineering (CASHE) has elected Steve Whitworth, project director for Kitchell’s Healthcare Division, to the board as vice president. CASHE is a non-profit organization with a mission to develop knowledge and expertise in hospital engineering and related disciplines.

“It is a great honor to be elected to the CASHE board, to foster collaboration between our healthcare industry clients and peers. We all benefit from more advanced healthcare facilities in our community, both personally and professionally, and it’s rewarding to be able to make an impact on something so important,” Whitworth said.  

Previously Whitworth served as head of the Education Committee where he developed the education curriculum for 2009 and arranged for speakers at each monthly session. 

CASHE members come from a wide range of disciplines including facilities maintenance and operations; plant engineering; clinical and biomedical engineering; technology management; planning, design and construction; safety; and security management. Whitworth joins the CASHE board with newly elected president Nick Dalba, secretary Bill Sheeley, treasurer Chris Jacobson as well as three new members-at-large and several committee chairs. 

Other Kitchell CASHE members include Ryan Hook, Dave Lane, Dick Crowley (who is a former chair of the sponsorship committee), and Michael Wolfe.